Marseille (AFP) –
The first researchers fleeing US spending cuts imposed by President
Donald Trump will start work at a French university in June, officials
said Thursday.
Aix Marseille University said its "Safe Place for Science" scheme
received a flood of applicants after announcing in March it would open
its doors to US scientists threatened by cuts.
Of 298
applications, 242 were deemed eligible and "are being studied" for some
20 available posts, the university said in a statement.
It added that 135 of the applicants were US citizens, and 45 were dual citizens.
University president Eric Berton said he wanted to see a new status
of "refugee scientist" be created, and for more US researchers to be
welcomed in France and Europe.
A bill establishing such a status
was presented in the French parliament on Monday by former president
Francois Hollande, now a deputy.
Aix Marseille University has
previously brought in 25 scientists from Ukraine, Yemen, Afghanistan and
the Palestinian territories under another programme for researchers
under threat.
The university has set aside a budget so that each researcher taken
in receives between 600,000 and 800,000 euros ($680,00-$910,000) over
three years to continue their work.
It said the applicants from a
variety of US institutions, including Johns Hopkins, NASA, Yale,
Stanford, Columbia and the University of Pennsylvania.
A selection panel will meet next Wednesday, followed by remote interviews before the first scientists arrive in early June.
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